Invest97Le

So the conglomeration of warm winds and squally clouds that formed out in the Atlantic, having been blown from the Sarah, today organised itself and became Tropical Storm Matthew.
Up until today it was simply known as Investigation 97 Longtitude East or Invest97Le.
Storm Matthew spent the day ravaging Barbados, but the storm is 650 miles across so this afternoon wet weather and lightening storms have reached Grand Cayman and we have had a hint of the storms awesome power.

Over the next couple of days Storm Matthew is predicted to become a Catagory 2 hurricane and to turn northwards and head towards Jamacia and Cuba.

However predicting storm paths is not an exact science so we are getting prepared here for a windy weekend.

‘Prepare for the worst and hope for the best’ is the motto here, so tomorrow we will fill the cars with fuel, get out emergency cash and stock up the food cupboards.


Along with everyone else we will watch the unfolding news closely. But as I am the key holder for one of the main hurricane shelters on the island (my school) I will be getting regular updates like the one above so that worse comes to worse I can turn my school over to our local Hurricane Committee.

Quite a responsibility given I have been here for less than two months. The reality of my role is I have carry the keys at all times and have my emergency phone on and charged up 24/7.

‘Hurricane Shelter Key Holder’, that’s an interesting one for the old CV!

But seriously even a near miss or a side swipe from 650 mile wide storm can be very bumpy, a direct hit can be devastating. The last hurricane to make landfall here was Ivan, and the scars it left run deep. Physically and mentally.

There and Brac Again

There And ‘BRAC’ Again.
A (Literacy) Coaches Tale
By V A Read.

Today I went to Cayman Brac (one of the smaller islands about 100 km east of Grand Cayman) to coach teachers in literacy strategies at the two small primary schools there.

Here are some photos of that quest from start to finish. The return flight got a little hairy as we were close to a 650 mile wide storm, ironically named ‘Storm Matthew.’

As you can see the plane was quite small. We flew past ‘Little Cayman’ which is an even smaller island than Cayman Brac.

It’s normally only the rich and famous that commute to work by plane!


Victoria was up early today for her commute to work.

It involved flying to Cayman Brac on the Government plane for the first time!

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The short flight took her out over Little Cayman before landing on our sister island The Brac!

On the way back Victoria flew over the outer fringes of Tropical Storm Matthew and saw a great light show.

Chatting to her on the phone before she caught the flight back it sounds like she had a good day!

Hurricane Matthew

As much as I would like to be able to say that today’s blog is about my impact on these islands, a tounge in cheek piece about my ego, or a self-depricating monologue regarding my over inflated sense of self-importance. I am afraid it is not.

Tropical Storm Matthew is on the way from the Atlantic and has a high chance of becoming Hurricane Matthew by the weekend!

It is Tuesday but I have already lost track of the number of Hurricane Matthew jokes this week. Gallows humour is strong here. Gulp…

“A budding tropical system is likely to soon become Tropical Depression Fourteen and then Tropical Storm Matthew at any time into Wednesday,” AccuWeather Hurricane Expert Dan Kottlowski said.

“The system will take a westward path across the central Caribbean this weekend, where strengthening to a hurricane is possible,” Kottlowski said.

Areas from the Dominican Republic and Haiti to Cuba and Jamaica, as well as northern Venezuela and Colombia, should closely monitor the path and strength of the system, which could be a strong tropical storm or hurricane by Sunday.

It is too soon to even mention specifics regarding landfall location, if there is a landfall at all. But coastal residents along the Gulf and East coasts should be aware that there is the potential for a tropical storm or hurricane in their vicinity next week.

It’s just a mess of clouds and rain on Tuesday, but a vast majority of forecast models expect this system to strengthen as it tracks west. Many of these models suggest it will become a hurricane later this week. On Tuesday, the National Hurricane Center gave this system 90% of becoming a tropical cyclone by Thursday morning.

Interaction with the large islands and mountains could hinder any strengthening.

Cruise, fishing and shipping interests in the Caribbean Sea may want to avoid the area until the threat passes beyond early next week.

The system could take a northward or northwestward turn late this weekend and into early next week.

How far west the system makes the turn will determine whether or not the U.S. Gulf Coast or the Atlantic Seaboard will be threatened next week.

The system’s movement will also dictate which of the Greater Antilles would be directly affected by heavy rain, flooding, mudslides and strong winds this weekend.

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The Men for Honduras

Culture Shock 2

So there I was mid morning running a performance management meeting. When Kim, my deputy, and Vanessa, whose appraisal session it was, suddenly started jumping up and down. Literally jumping up and down. Pointing out the window and shouting, “he’s got an iguana! He’s got an iguana.”

So I turned to see what the fuss was all about.

There in the car park stood my security guard watching three strange men. The guys were running up and down chasing iguanas and catching them with their bare hands.

Now these things were huge and they were putting up a real struggle but the guys were winning.

Eventually they caught eight large specimens. The iguanas were massive, nearly as long as their protagonist were tall.


The Funny thing was while they were being chased the lizards put up a real fight but once caught and held firmly they became quite placid and calm. Which given where this blog is going, is ironic…

Watching this through my window my initial guess was that the three chaps must have been working for a pest control company or as part of a government sanctioned cull.

So interest piqued I wondered out to see what was going on.

The guys greeted me cheerfully all smiles, thick Spanish accents and arms full of passive lizards. Lovely chaps.

With a broad grin my security guard announced, ‘They are Hondurans!’ As if this  in itself provided an explanation as to the events that were unfolding in the car park.

‘Right?’ Says I, ‘so what?’

At which point one of the chaps held up a particularly large reptilian specimen, over four feet from tip to tail and with a broad smile he said, ‘dinner’.

It turns out some Hondurans eat iguanas and these guys go around the island catching them.  They remove what is consider to be a pest and get a free dinner! They think iguanas are great. And when prompted they will happily tell you they taste like chicken.

The guys have promised to cook me some next time they are around!

Ingredients:

1 Iguana (large)

1 lime

1 bunch cilantro

salt

pepper

Since you can never tell what the weight is until you have it you will have to wing it.

Declaw, skin and gut.

Salt and pepper to taste.

Grill or broil till cooked through. Time depends on the size.

Cover with lime juice and cilantro.

The meat will taste a little like, yes, chicken. However it has the texture similar to that of crab.

Makes a nice meat filling for tacos.

Tortougas


So today was pretty cool. James signed up to head up to West Bay to take part in releasing baby turtles. After school the students headed up to the north of the island where they excavated a turtle nest, the hatchlings where tiny and seemed so helpless. 

The turtle conservationost collects the hatchlings as they emerge and keeps them safe until night time before releasing them. By doing this they greatly reduce the chance of predation and increase the numbers who reach the sea. Left to their own devices many turtles perish in the nest because they can not dig their way out, die on the beach in the heat of the day having got lost or are eaten by birds. Often more than half the babies from a nest are lost before they reach the sea! This way far more are given a fighting start by being helped directly into the sea at the time most of their natural predators are not active.

James’s group successful took 26 hatchlings out of the nest and put them safely into the incubator. 


Then tonight at 8 o’clock we gathered on the beach under the stars with nothing but a couple of red torches for light for the release. James and his class mates carefully released the tiny hatchlings on to the sand where a few quickly headed down to the water and away out to the sea. The others were very carefully carried to the water and released by hand. James released three babies! They were amazing so tiny! We watched each one till they worked out what they were supposed to do and they shot away into the dark sea.

The conditions were perfect for the release the sea was calm and warm the star were out and there where no lights on shore to guide them the wrong way! So 26 baby turtles reached the sea safely.


The next time any of them come on land again will be between 20 and 50 years time when they are fully mature females, 1.5 meters long, weighing around 200lb, coming ashore to lay the next generation of green sea turtles. They will have swum thousands of miles across oceans before returning to where they were released! The males will never come ashore again!


Good luck little buddies and God Speed! May you find your way safely home one day. 

What an amazing experience and a privilege. 

Starfish Point

We spent the morning at Starfish Point today, for Artie”s birthday, a lovely way to spend Sumday morning Buck’s Fizz and croissants by the sea.


Then because we had not had a enough sun and sea the Castaways met at Smiths Cove for a picnic this afternoon. I have had a fair bit of sun today! Cissy introduced us to Texan Swamp Root Dip. I think it must be a horse radish like thing, it was very nice.

Columbian Coffee

There are four things taken more seriously than hurricanes and earthquakes here and they are, in order of importance, prayer, singing, food and drink. 

Faith

Yes there is church. But I have a sneaking suspicion that the importance of church and prayer are a function of the being in a part of the world where you live with the reality of storms and quakes.  

Worship is a huge part of life here. There are more churches than shops and by that I don’t mean buildings I means Churches. 

Yes there is a church on every corner but as I have said before some of the Churches here don’t even have buildings they meet on the beach to pray, to sing and to baptise. 

Where else can you Snorkle and attend a Sunday service! 

There are Methodists, Catholics, Seventhday Adventists, Baptists, Presbyterian, Evangelicals and Angelicans. 

There is the Church of God, there are United Churches, Jehovah’s Witnesses, The Curch of Jesus, Church of the Latter Day Saint’s. 

And my current favourite The Ben Gun Church. Just reflect on that for a moment. That’s a church named after a marooned pirate. Brilliant. I wonder if they pray specifically for the Cheese Makers every Sunday?

Every Church has at least two subsets so for any Anglicans there is St Alban’s which is Church of England and part of the Diocese of London and there is St George’s which falls under the Church of Jamacia. Then there is First Assembly of God and The Second Assembly of God (splitters!). 

There are so many Churches in fact that I have calculated that each can only have a congregation of about 15 people!

So as you can imagine on one level they are in competition. 

It is interesting to watch the different factions meeting and passively aggressively blessing each other through clenched teeth. “Bless you” says one and imidiately comes the teeth grinding response and while it sounds like “bless you” the eyes say something different…  

The gauntlet has been thrown down. Battle are lines drawn. This is an  ecumenical dance off, the real roots of rap! This is serious, not quite Crips and Bloods but definitely Jets v Sharks, the T-Birds v the Scorpians, with finger clicking and foot stomping. 

The two main protagonists square off and one steps up and breaks into prayer. Now this no simple Hail Mary, not a well rehearsed Lords Prayer. 

This a free style prayer throw down…

“Lord God we thank you for this blessed day, the sunlight and fresh breezes, God. Lord God we thank you for the sustainance of the food your love brings us and the sweet water that quenches our thirst and is a balm to our souls,  God. Lord God thank you for the friendship and support of the people around us and the gift of their love which is a reflection of the love you show us everyday…” Now this goes on for a while, a long while the “…God. Lord God…” providing vital thinking time so the gladiator can compose the next line of thanks. 

Eventually the champion begins to run out of steam, so they switch tack and next comes the “Lord God we ask you to bless…” And the pattern repeats this time asking for blessings on pretty much anything. 

It’s like ‘Just a Minute’ on steroids, the only thing you can repeat is ‘God, Lord God’, there can be no hesitation, no repetition or deviation.

All the while you can see their opponent is furiously composing their response, more florid, more flowery, more  wonderful. 

It is amazing and uplifting. And it can can go on for ages. 

The single longest freestyle prayer I have heard so far was 8 minutes without a pause or break.  I don’t think the pray leader even blinked! 

Eventually the speaker runs dry or loops round to a theme that has been covered and everyone realises that it signals that the round is over. 

So with a gracious “in the name of your Son our Lord Jesus Christ” they concede the floor and an end to the first round. Everyone says ‘Amen’ and the respondent steps forward and let’s fly.

More often than not the two Prayer Warriors are just two evenly matched, by the end they are swaying from the effor, from the concentration and the religious ecstasy.  

Everyone realises they need help and so the gloves come off and the the members of the different congregations jump in and the singing begins! 

And so does the healing, the sense of competition, the minor theological differences melt away. Are washed away by the simple joy of shared song and melody. 

It is wonderful and awesome! When it is done genuine love replaces the rivalry and laughter and smiles abound. 

Meetings begin with prayer, meals begin with prayer, prayer is the foundation for almost all social interaction. There is nothing fake about this, no embarrassement. It is heartfelt, genuine and a real privilege to be asked to lead. It reminds me of something we have lost. A more caring and communal time. 

The competition is real but so is the love and acceptance. 

On a Sunday morning it is St Alban’s the CofE church we go to. St George’s is part of the Anglican Church of Jamaica. For the last few years they have been arguing about who has primacy. 

The Anglican Church here has traditionally been part of the the Bishop of London’s remit and has been since 1606. But in recent years the Arch Bishop of Jamaica has said it should be his. In response the CofE Bish Bash Boshed, I believe this the correct technical term, the Rector of St Alban’s and made him a Bishop to counter this claim… 

So now we have a Bishop with the smallest congregation this side of the Pitcarne Islands!

The Bishop’s sermons are really thought provoking and interesting and the church while tiny, is a really lovely. At the end of communion the Bishop finishes up any left over wine, as is his duty, but while he has a small congregation I think he blesses enough wine for a cathedral full. The combination of heat and half a litter of fortified wine wine leave him swaying about… his blessings after the service are so fun coz I have a sneaking suspicion he’s smashed. It is a lovely welcoming church and we feel a part of the congregation already.

Food

Cayman is truly a melting pot of North American, South American and Caribbean food, you can find on any menu burgers, Nicaraguan, Jamaican or local dishes, curries and fish, well sea food, feature highly and are great. Yams, sweet potatoes, plantains and goat abound. Our current favourites are salt fish and aki patties, blackened mahi mahi and jerked pork with festival! Oh so good.

The jerked pork is made on oil drum smokers by the side of the road, in old shacks and posh restaurants and it is lovely. It is served with a fiery sauce and festival, a handmade fried bread roll, a real treat.

Coffee

The last of today’s trinity is coffee. We are only a stones throw from South America so the coffee is fresh and strong. Don’t bother with the big brands and high street names that you know, here you go local and buy great coffee with names like Bustello and Collombia. And with that the kettle has boiled, so hasta la vista…

Sunday Chillin’

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Found this while out and about, I think it’s just for us… James and Poppy Read!

Sunday and everything, well pretty much everything, we could get a hair cut but that’s about all, is closed for the day, it really is a day of rest. With the shops shut and the fact that no cruise ships arrive on a Sunday you really feel disconnected from the world, it is the day you really know you are on a small island 100’s of miles from anywhere! On a sunny morning it is an amazing feeling.

Apparently what you do on Sunday is brunch. You get dressed up and head along to the Hotels on 7 Mile Beach and have a long lazy brunch All you can eat. Fizz flowing freely and every type of food you can imagine. Kids are let loose playing on the beach and the grown ups kick back. So that’s next weeks plan, for today we are having a quiet one.

Breakfast on the veranda watching lizards and chickens is in order. The banana tree in the garden has a big bunch growing, I reckon they will be ready by the end of the week…
Church in the morning, maybe catch up with some fellow Castaways for a coffee but other than that just a peaceful day chillin’.

We might potter down to the beach for a snorkel later or just some rock jumping, the day as they say, is our oyster. Well conch, probably served as a fritter as they don’t really do oysters here as far as I’ve seen so far…

So we spent the afternoon down the beach and today at the cove we saw barracuda, a huge ball of fish (I think escaping from  the former) and two baby stingrays.

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Driving Test


Victoria and I sat our driving test yesterday to get our Cayman driving licences, I am pleased to report we both passed, we have to pop back to get our new licences. The test comprised of a 40 multiple choice questions on screen quiz on the Cayman Road Code. We both have been furiously revising so how would you do? 

The road code says, ” A driver travelling at 20mph needs 20′ thinking time and 20′ breaking distance so needs an overall stoping distance of 40′. At 30 mph its 30′ thinking and 45′ breaking. At 40mph it is 40′ thinking and 80′ breaking distance. At 50mph it is 50′ thinking and 125′ breaking giving you an overall stopping distance of 175′.”

Now so far I have not found anywhere on the island you can drive faster than 50mph. Rumour has it somewhere up on the North of the Island towards rum point you can but I am yet to confirm this…

So the question is ‘What is the total stopping distance for a car travelling at 60mph?”.

Answers please on a postcard, a single person Rum Cake for the first correct answer to reach me. Closing date 10th September. (Ha ha the rum cake is mine…).